NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the
internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-3996-21
JAIME G. WILLIAMSBERG,
f/k/a JAIME G. WEINBERG,
Plaintiff-Respondent/
Cross-Appellant,
v.
APARRI, LLC and JAN R.
WEINBERG,
Defendants-Appellants/
Cross-Respondents.
_________________________
Argued November 6, 2023 – Decided December 26, 2023
Before Judges Sabatino and Marczyk.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
Division, Mercer County, Docket No. L-0457-17.
Jonathan M. Preziosi argued the cause for defendants-
appellants/cross-respondents (Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard
& Smith, LLP, attorneys; Jonathan M. Preziosi, Brian
Deeney and Colman Preziosi, of counsel and on the
briefs).
Deirdre T. Cooney argued the cause for plaintiff-
respondent/cross-appellant (Walsh Pizzi O'Reilly
Falanga, LLP, attorneys; Marc Denis Haefner, of
counsel and on the briefs; Deirdre T. Cooney, on the
briefs).
PER CURIAM
This litigation concerns an intrafamily dispute over a limited liability
company that owns a mixed-use real estate parcel in Princeton. For the reasons
that follow, we affirm the trial court's determinations and reject both the appeal
and cross-appeal.
I.
The property in question has been owned by a New Jersey limited liability
company, defendant Aparri, LLC ("the LLC"), formed in June 2001. Originally
the LLC had three members with equal one-third shares: defendant Jan R.
Weinberg ("Jan"), his then-wife Joy T. Weinberg ("Joy"), and their son, plaintiff
Jaime G. Weinberg, now known as Jaime G. Williamsberg ("Jaime").1 Part of
the premises has been rented to residential tenants and another portion utilized
for the family's real estate business.
In 2006, Jan and Joy divorced. In 2013, Joy failed to make a capital
contribution requested by Jan, which resulted in her being expelled from the
1
To avoid confusion, we use first names for these individuals with common
surnames, as do the briefs and the trial court decisions. No disrespect is
intended.
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2
LLC. Her ownership interest in the LLC was then equally divided between Jan
and Jaime, leaving them each with 50% ownership.
Then, in 2015, Jaime notified Jan he was withdrawing from the LLC and
demanded to be paid the fair market value of his 50% interest, pursuant to the
terms of the operating agreement the members signed the day the LLC was
formed.
Jan rejected Jaime's payment demand, asserting that Jaime was due
nothing on his withdrawal. Jan contended the buyout provision in the original
operating agreement was included by mistake by the attorney who drafted it in
2001. Jan alleged that a revised operating agreement, which did not contain a
buyout provision, was prepared by an attorney and executed by the three
members the week after the original was signed. However, Jan was unable to
produce a signed copy of the alleged amended version. Nor was the attorney
able to find a signed copy of the amended agreement in her files, having only a
signed copy of the original version.
Under Jan's protest, the parties retained an appraiser. Jaime agreed to that
appraiser's valuation of the LLC and requested payment of half the amount. Jan
continued to decline payment and asserted that the amended agreement entitled
Jaime to nothing.
A-3996-21
3
Consequently, Jaime filed this lawsuit against Jan and the LLC in the Law
Division to collect payment for his interest in the company. After the trial court
bifurcated the case, the trial court held two successive bench trials, the first to
establish which of two alleged LLC operating agreements is enforceable, and
the second to value Jaime's interest in the LLC.
In the first trial, the court ruled the original executed operating
agreement—and not the unsigned amended version asserted by Jan—contained
an enforceable buyout provision entitling LLC members, who voluntarily
withdraw, to payment of the fair market value of their interests. The court
applied a clear-and-convincing evidentiary standard to Jan's proof of the
allegedly lost document, rather than a preponderance-of-the-evidence standard
that Jan had advocated.
In the second trial, presided over by a different judge,2 the court heard
competing testimony by experts for both sides. Jaime's experts advocated an
asset-based approach which valued the LLC at $594,000, and defendants' expert
advocated an income-based "going concern" approach that valued the LLC at
$221,500. The judge adopted the method of Jaime's experts, which valued
2
The first and second judges are both now retired.
A-3996-21
4
Jaime's one-half interest as $297,000. However, the judge denied Jaime's
request for a discretionary award of prejudgment interest.
The LLC and Jan have appealed, arguing the trial court erred in rejecting
the amended operating agreement and in its valuation of Jaime's interest. Jaime
cross-appeals the denial of prejudgment interest.
II.
The scope of our review of the trial court's decisions that followed these
two non-jury trials is guided by well-settled principles. "Findings by the trial
judge are considered binding on appeal when supported by adequate, substantial
and credible evidence." Rova Farms Resort, Inc. v. Invs. Ins. Co., 65 N.J. 474,
484 (1974) (considering the scope of appellate review in a civil non-jury case).
"Deference is especially appropriate when the evidence is largely testimonial
and involves questions of credibility." Cesare v. Cesare, 154 N.J. 394, 412
(1998). However, "[a] trial court's interpretation of the law and the legal
consequences that flow from established facts are not entitled to any special
deference." Manalapan Realty, L.P. v. Twp. Comm. of Manalapan, 140 N.J.
366, 378 (1995).
A-3996-21
5
A.
The first issue we address is Jan's appeal of the trial court's determination
that the original operating agreement, rather than the alleged amended
agreement, controls the disposition of Jaime's interest. For context, we briefly
describe pertinent aspects of the LLC statutory scheme.
LLCs may operate by the default rules of the Revised Uniform Limited
Liability Company Act, N.J.S.A. 42:2C-1 to -94 (the "RULLCA"), or by a
custom agreement, called an operating agreement, that must incorporate some
default rules but may rewrite others. N.J.S.A. 42:2C-11(b). Relevant here,
operating agreements may customize the process and rights of member
withdrawal.3 See N.J.S.A. 42:2C-11.
The RULLCA "is to be liberally construed to give the maximum effect to
the principle of freedom of contract and to the enforceability of operating
agreements." N.J.S.A. 42:2C-11(i). "The statute thus encouraged LLC
members to collectively devise an individualized governance and management
plan that best advanced the goals of their business." IE Test, LLC v. Carroll,
3
By default, members may "dissociate" from an LLC when "[t]he company has
notice of the person's express will to withdraw as a member." N.J.S.A. 42:2C-
46. "When a person is dissociated . . . any transferable interest owned by the
person immediately before dissociation in the person's capacity as a member is
owned by the person solely as a transferee." N.J.S.A. 42:2C-47(a).
A-3996-21
6
226 N.J. 166, 177-78 (2016) (commenting on the LLCA, the precursor statute to
the RULLCA, albeit both have identical purpose statements).
"[A] draft operating agreement does not become the operating agreement
of an LLC unless it is 'the agreement . . . of all the members of' the LLC, N.J.S.A.
42:2C-2, . . . ." Premier Physician Network, LLC v. Maro, 468 N.J. Super. 182,
194 (App. Div. 2021). "The Act does not specify how the members must
indicate their agreement to a draft operating agreement in order to render it
effective." Id. at 195. The Act "does not require their agreement to be bound
by an operating agreement be in writing or that it be executed by them. In fact,
the operating agreement itself need not be written and may be oral. N.J.S.A.
42:2C-2." Ibid. Jan and the LLC contend the revised operating agreement was,
in fact, signed by all three LLC members, even though Jan has been unable to
locate an executed copy. Their argument implicates the so-called "lost
document" doctrine of commercial law.
For decades, New Jersey generally has required that, to prove the terms of
a lost document claimed to be an enforceable agreement, the proponent of the
missing agreement must prove its existence with clear and convincing evidence.
See, e.g., Zuckermandel v. Zuckermandel, 135 N.J. Eq. 598, 598-99 (Ch. 1944)
(finding insufficient evidence to prove by "clear" and "convincing" evidence
A-3996-21
7
that a lost instrument conveyed a business interest between spouses); Farber v.
Plainfield Tr. Co., 136 N.J. Eq. 183, 185 (Ch. 1945) (requiring the proponent of
a lost agreement with a railroad company granting the proponent access to
railroad tracks to prove the lost agreement's existence with "clear and
convincing" evidence).
Defendants contend the trial court should have applied to this issue the
lesser evidentiary standard of a preponderance of the evidence. In that vein,
they cite to an older Chancery case, Maddock v. Connolly, 82 N.J. Eq. 533 (Ch.
1913), for the proposition that the standard is "reasonably certain" and "cogent"
evidence. However, that case actually states the standard is "clear and cogent,"
which we view is the same as clear and convincing. 82 N.J. Eq. at 534.
Defendants assert this test is effectively the same as a preponderance standard.
Additionally, defendants rely on this court's opinion in Borough of Sayreville v.
Bellefonte Insurance Co., 320 N.J. Super. 598, 603 (App. Div. 1998), which
allowed the existence of an insurance contract to be proven by only a
preponderance of the evidence.
We agree with the trial court that a clear and convincing burden of proof
applied to defendants' assertion of an enforceable "lost" LLC operating
agreement. We concur with the court that defendants' reliance on Borough of
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8
Sayreville is misplaced. In that opinion, we acknowledged that the court in
Zuckermandel had "referred approvingly to other courts which, in establishing
missing 'instruments' by parol proofs, and applied standards of proofs described
as 'clear,' 'cogent,' 'reasonably certain' and 'convincing'". Id. at 603. Adopting
the reasoning of a Delaware federal district court in Remington Arms Co. v.
Liberty Mutual Insurance Co., 810 F.Supp. 1420, 1426 (D.C. Del. 1992), we
chose in Borough of Sayreville to depart—in that insurance policy context—
from those "usual standard[s] in civil matters," because a "typical insurance
dispute" is "unlike those civil cases where the exceptional standard of clear and
convincing evidence was applied." Ibid. We therefore applied a preponderance
standard to the missing insurance policies, "[i]n the absence of any claim of
fraud." Id. at 604.
In the present case, the trial court reasonably distinguished insurance
policies, as form contracts unlikely to be fabricated, from LLC operating
agreements, which are often non-form documents tailored to the express
intentions of LLC members and which are more susceptible to fraud or
fabrication. We also are unpersuaded that Maddock v. Connolly, which
preceded the later Chancery opinions in Zuckermandel and Farber, warrants a
lesser burden of proof.
A-3996-21
9
The clear and convincing standard was appropriately applied. Even if,
hypothetically, a preponderance standard applied, we are satisfied the evidence
of a revised agreement presented to the trial court fell short of that mark as well.
Defendants argue it is implausible to conclude that the parties acted
quickly to pay an attorney to correct the agreement but then did not sign the
amended version. They contend the existence and content of the amended
agreement was proven by: (1) a fax from the attorney who drafted the agreement
attaching corrected pages; (2) a complete but unsigned amended agreement; and
(3) the testimony of the attorney, who authenticated those documents and
testified to making changes at Jan and Jamie's request. The trial court
nonetheless reasonably concluded that defendants' narrative was not shown to
be as credible as plaintiff's version.
Among other things, we note that although Jan contended that four copies
of the amended agreement were allegedly signed, he admitted that his own copy
was missing. Despite his decades of business experience, Jan stated he signed
the original agreement without first reading it to confirm it was drafted as he
had requested, and only read it for the first time hours after its execution.
Jan chose not to ask his ex-wife Joy for her copy ostensibly because of
their divorce, and apparently no third-party deposition notice or subpoena to
A-3996-21
10
obtain it was ever served on her. The attorney who drafted the agreements
denied ever receiving a signed copy of an amended version and could find none
in her file.
Meanwhile, in his own testimony, Jaime denied ever signing or receiving
an amended agreement. Defendants failed to persuade the trial court why, if
Jaime were lying and actually believed the amended agreement existed, he
would logically withdraw from the LLC knowing that agreement would entitle
him to nothing in return for the substantial capital he had invested in it.
Further, the trial testimony and the LLC tax returns reasonably supported
Jaime's contention that the members adhered to the original agreement by acting
in accordance with Section 4.01(b) of that document in reapportioning Joy's
interest evenly between Jan and Jaime upon her failure to participate in the call
for a capital contribution. Section 10.04(b) of that original agreement prescribed
that the removed member's interest "will be transferred to the remaining
[m]embers pro rata . . . ." (emphasis added). By contrast, the alleged amended
agreement provided in Section 10.04(b) that "[a] Member may be removed with
the unanimous vote of all the other Members, in which event the removed
Membership interest will be transferred [entirely] to Jan R. Weinberg."
(emphasis added). The LLC's tax returns for 2013 through 2015 (the years
A-3996-21
11
immediately following Joy's removal in 2013), listed Jan and Jaime as 50%
owners of the LLC, not as 66.6% and 33.3% owners.
We recognize Jan did assert at trial that "[w]hen Joy [] was no longer a
partner of Aparri LLC her interest should have reverted to me solely, not split
50/50 . . . [per] the revised operating agreement." Nevertheless, the evidence
reasonably shows that the parties—in practice—followed the original, not the
supposedly amended agreement, in removing Joy and in dividing her interest
equally rather than transferring it completely to Jan.
Applying, as we must, the deference we owe to a trial court's factual and
credibility findings in a non-jury case, Rova Farms, 65 N.J. at 506, we conclude
there is "adequate, substantial, and credible evidence" to support the trial court's
determination that the original operating agreement governed the parties'
relationship when Jaime withdrew and asked to be bought out.
B.
The second set of issues we address concern defendants' arguments that
the trial court miscalculated Jaime's rightful share after the valuation phase of
the case. Among other things, defendants maintain the trial court erroneously
adopted the net asset valuation method of plaintiff's expert by treating the LLC
akin to a real estate holding company. In addition, defendants argue the trial
A-3996-21
12
court incorrectly omitted a property management fee of $80,333.08 allegedly
owed to Weinberg Management Company ("WMC"), an entity controlled by
Jan, and also erred by omitting transaction costs associated with any
hypothetical sale.
"Our standard of review for valuation disputes is deferential because the
valuation of closely[-]held corporations is 'inherently fact-based[,]' not based in
'exact science,' and 'frequently become[s] battles between experts." Sipko v.
Koger, Inc., 251 N.J. 162, 179 (2022) (alterations in original). "In a bench trial,
the acceptance or rejection of an expert's opinion as to valuation of a
corporation, and the expert's methodology, are matters peculiarly within the
province of the trial court." Denike v. Cupo, 394 N.J. Super. 357, 381-82 (App.
Div. 2007) (reversed on other grounds, 196 N.J. 502 (2008)). "The judge's
findings are thus entitled to great deference and will be reversed only if the trial
judge abused his discretion." Ibid.
A trial court's valuation should be affirmed if "there is sufficient credible
evidence to support both the method of computation and the quantum of value
determined by the court." Middlesex Cnty. v. Clearwater Vill., Inc., 163 N.J.
Super. 166, 174 (App. Div. 1978). However, "'we need not give deference to
the trial judge's determinations of what discounts or premiums the determination
A-3996-21
13
of fair value may include, or must exclude, since they are questions of law.'"
Sipko, 251 N.J. at 179 (quoting Casey v. Brennan, 344 N.J. Super. 83, 110 (App.
Div. 2001)).
The LLC's governing operating agreement in Section 10.04(a) entitles a
withdrawing member to the sum "determined by multiplying the Member's
Percentage Interest hereto by the fair market value of the Company as of the
close of the month preceding the month in which the Member’s interest is
terminated." (emphasis added). Jaime withdrew from the LLC by letter dated
July 21, 2015, and stated the effective date of his withdrawal was January 21,
2016. Therefore, December 31, 2015 is the undisputed date to value the LLC.
The operating agreement prescribes that "fair market value shall be
established by a certified public accountant selected unanimously by all the
Members." However, despite the pre-lawsuit real estate appraisal that was
conducted, the parties ultimately could not agree on a valuation of the LLC and
submitted the question to the trial court, which duly considered testimony from
competing experts.
Fair market value is "'what a willing buyer and a willing seller would agree
to, neither being under any compulsion to act.'" Borough of Saddle River v. 66
East Allendale, LLC, 216 N.J. 115, 136 (2013) (quoting State v. Silver, 92 N.J.
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14
507, 513 (1983)). We are satisfied the trial court reasonably adopted the
approach of plaintiff's expert, who construed the LLC's operations as having
characteristics of a real estate holding company under Section 5(b) of IRS
Revenue Ruling 59-60, and thus its fair market value should be valued by the
properties in its portfolio.
Defendants cite to various decisions of the United States Tax Court that
expound upon the definition of a real estate holding company. See Est. of
Tanenblatt v. Comm'r, 106 T.C.M. (CCH) 579 (2013) (defining a real estate
holding company as "managed not for current income but, rather, for
appreciation in the value of its holdings"); Est. of Campbell v. Comm'r, 62
T.C.M. (CCH) 1514 (1991) (similarly defining the term as a company that owns
assets for value appreciation, not income). They maintain the definition of a
real estate holding company should be strictly confined to only businesses that
trade real estate for profit. They argue the LLC's real property was not
purchased for capital appreciation and resale, noting that the LLC generates
income by renting the property to residential tenants and intends to continue
doing so. Hence, they submit the LLC is an operating company, not a holding
one.
Although defendants' arguments in this regard are not without probative
A-3996-21
15
force, the trial court nevertheless had adequate grounds for choosing to adopt
the net asset method of plaintiff's experts. With regard to IRS Revenue Ruling
59-60's definition of a real estate holding company, the IRS recommends that
"'all available financial data, as well as all relevant factors affecting the fair
market value, should be considered.'" Bowen v. Bowen, 96 N.J. 36, 44 (1984)
(quoting Rev. Rul. 59-60 at § 4.01). "Generally, greater weight will be given to
earnings factors for those companies that sell products or services, and to asset
values for investment or holding companies." Ibid. "No formula can be devised
that will be generally applicable to the multitude of different valuation issues
arising in [the valuation of closely held companies]." Rev. Rul. 59-60 at § 3.01.
This IRS guidance encourages tailoring valuations to the particular structure of
the business to be valued, not to force the business into a predetermined
valuation framework.
The trial court adopted such a business-specific valuation approach
encouraged by the IRS. Plaintiff's valuation experts recognized the LLC's
income derived entirely from one asset, the Princeton property, whose value was
readily estimable from transactions of similar real estate. This comported with
the IRS's statement that "[t]he value of a closely held investment or real estate
holding company . . . is closely related to the value of the assets underlying the
A-3996-21
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stock." Rev. Rul. 59-60 at § 5(b). An expert for plaintiff reasonably discounted
the real estate appraisal by 10% to consider the challenges associated with
marketing a closely-held business, and declined to make further adjustments
after reviewing the LLC's financial documents, deposition testimony from this
litigation, and industry research.
On the other hand, the trial court reasonably rejected the opinion of
defendants' valuation expert as "def[ying] logic" by suggesting the value of the
LLC is $221,500. As the court observed, no "willing seller" would realistically
accept less for its business than the seller could obtain by selling its only asset,
here the Princeton property. This reasoning is sensible and we decline to
overturn it.
In addition, we are unpersuaded by defendants' contention that the court
was required under Musto v. Vidas, 333 N.J. Super. 52 (App. Div. 2000), to
adopt a going-concern valuation method to determine this particular LLC's fair
market value. We qualified our discussion in Musto by saying that "[g]enerally"
in valuation cases a closely-held corporation "must be valued as a going
concern." Id. at 63. We did not rule out in Musto possible exceptions to that
general principle. Defendants cite to no other published New Jersey cases
applying Musto, and the out-of-state cases they rely upon are not binding.
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As our first opinion in that case noted, Musto involved a multi-state
engineering firm with two divisions and offices located in six states and the
District of Columbia. 281 N.J. Super. 548, 551 (App. Div. 1995). The enterprise
employed as many as 500 people with annual revenue of up to $25 million. Id.
at 553. The present matter, involving a single parcel in Princeton and a family-
owned-and-operated LLC with no apparent additional employees, is not a
comparable "going concern." Although we need not here delineate all of the
possible applications of and exceptions to Musto, we simply conclude that the
trial court did not manifestly err in adopting the net asset valuation approach in
this particular case.
Further, the trial court reasonably declined to adjust the LLC's value by
subtracting transactional costs attendant to a hypothetical sale of the property
contemplated by the valuation analysis. Testimony by plaintiff's expert, as
relied on by the trial court, sufficiently established why such costs need not be
subtracted from the valuation of the property.
Nor was the trial court obligated to reduce the LLC's value by a sum
allegedly owed to WMC for deferred property management fees. At trial, Jan
was unable to produce written consent from the other LLC members authorizing
him to borrow funds on behalf of the LLC, as required by the operating
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agreement. The trial court reasonably found Jan's testimony about the unpaid
fees was not persuasive, and the spreadsheet reflecting this alleged debt was
insufficient to establish the debt's existence.
C.
Turning briefly to plaintiff's cross-appeal, we are unconvinced the trial
court misapplied its wide discretion in declining to award prejudgment interest
in this commercial litigation. "New Jersey case law distinguishes between pre-
judgment interest as a discretionary allowance, and post-judgment interest to
which a litigant is entitled as of right." Interchange State Bank v. Rinaldi, 303
N.J. Super. 239, 260 (App. Div. 1997). "The allowance of prejudgment interest
in a contract action is largely dependent upon the application of principles of
equity." Manning Eng'r, Inc. v. Hudson Cnty. Park Comm'n, 71 N.J. 145, 159
(1976).
Here, having heard the testimony of the parties in this non-jury
commercial case, the trial court had the opportunity to consider the various
equities at stake and chose to not enhance the judgment for plaintiff with an
award of prejudgment interest. Moreover, as the trial court noted, the
"Operating Agreement states that Members are not entitled to interest on
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payments for the value of Membership. Therefore, [Jaime] is not entitled to
interest on payments for the value of [his] membership."
To the extent we have not discussed them, we have considered all of the
remaining arguments in the parties' briefs and deem them without sufficient
merit to warrant discussion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
Affirmed.
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